Trump didn't realize replacing a U.S. Supreme Court justice was part of his 100-day plan.

President Trump shrugged off the 100-day milestone in the White House as inconsequential ahead of the looming landmark — with only a fraction of his goals accomplished.

Among his campaign pledges, Trump vowed to pass legislation that would overhaul former President Obama's Affordable Care Act, punish businesses for moving factories outside of the United States and fund a Mexico border wall.

With days to go until the April 29 deadline, many of Trump's goals have yet to transpire. The GOP's Obamacare repeal fizzled without congressional support from Democrats and even the staunchest of conservative lawmakers in March.

"I think the 100 days is, you know, it's an artificial barrier. It's not very meaningful." Trump said in an interview with the Associated Press on Friday.

Trump was often pressed to address a laundry list of political goals in "Donald Trump's Contract with the American Voter," even as he meandered to tout his "great chemistry" with world leaders and electoral college victory. In one such non-sequitur, Trump said former President Abraham Lincoln would have lost California and New York’s electoral votes — if he somehow reanimated after his 1865 assassination.

"Things change. There has to be flexibility," Trump said, when asked if he should be held accountable to the plan.

He appeared to distance himself from the administration's pursuits in the document, suggesting that he had nothing to do with the so-called contract.

"Somebody put out the concept of a hundred-day plan," he said, without explain who.

Page one of President Donald Trump's '100-day action plan to Make America Great Again.'

(donaldjtrump.com/donaldjtrump.com)

Page two of President Donald Trump's '100-day action plan to Make America Great Again.'

(donaldjtrump.com/ donaldjtrump.com)

"Donald Trump's Contract with the American Voter."

Additionally, Trump seemed unacquainted with the document's contents, not realizing filling the empty U.S. Supreme Court seat was part of the plan to "restore security and the constitutional rule of law."

The same category called for revoking Obama's "unconstitutional" executive actions, memorandums and orders, pulling funding from sanctuary cities and deporting two million undocumented immigrants.

Despite thunderous chants to "build a wall" during Trump campaign rallies, the President suggested he was less beholden to his proposed U.S.-Mexico border wall. His chances to sign a bill funding the wall are dwindling as lawmakers continue to debate government funding ahead of Friday's budget deadline.